Walter Cronkite's press freedom legacy

Walter Cronkite had such a profound impact in so many ways
that one might overlook an important part of his legacy--his long efforts on
behalf of international press freedom and his advocacy on behalf of local journalists
around the world. Cronkite was a vital participant in the launch of the
Committee to Protect Journalists 28 years ago and, though his title here may
have been honorary co-chairman, he was an active force throughout the years.

In 1981, Michael Massing, then executive editor of the Columbia Journalism Review, and CBS News
writer Laurie Nadel formed the Committee to Protect Journalists to fight for the
rights of journalists around the world. Dan Rather, who had just taken over
from Cronkite as anchor of the CBS Evening News, summoned Nadel into his office
demanding to know more about the Committee. Rather not only offered to join the
board, he offered to help recruit Cronkite.

Massing and Nadel drafted a letter and sent it through CBS
inter-office mail. Cronkite wrote back saying that he didn't generally lend his
name to organizations in which he could not play an active role and, given his
schedule, he knew he could not be active. But because of the importance of CPJ's
mission he would make an exception and serve in an honorary position. But there
was nothing honorary about Cronkite's involvement with CPJ.

Not only was Cronkite America's best-known journalist, he
had led a group during the Vietnam War that gathered information about
reporters and photographers who were missing in action. His involvement with
CPJ suggested to U.S.
journalists the seriousness of the new organization, and his name at the top of
the letterhead had the potential of getting the attention of government
officials around the world. It did.

In April 1982, for example, after Argentina
invaded the Falkland Islands, starting a war with Britain, the government there
arrested three British journalists on charges of espionage. The Swiss
government, the pope, and the U.N. secretary-general all appealed for the
release of the three journalists, Simon Winchester
of The Sunday Times and Ian Mather
and Tony Prime of The Observer.

But Winchester remembers that
it was the CPJ letter, signed by Walter Cronkite and sent to Argentina's foreign and justice
ministers, that gave him the greatest hope. After he learned of the letter, he
wrote to his wife and children in England saying that he believed
that the end was in sight because Cronkite and CPJ had taken up his case. After
77 days in captivity--during which British Marines retook the FalklandsIslands--Winchester, Mather, and Prime were released and put on a
plane out of Argentina.
Mather later sent a letter to CPJ noting that, "we are totally convinced that
it was outside pressure that the led Argentine authorities to realize that our
continued incarceration could never be beneficial to the reputation of Argentina
no matter how well they looked after us."

The next year, when CPJ sought to visit apartheid South Africa,
it was a letter from Cronkite to the South African Embassy that secured visas
for our delegation. Our representatives, including Nadel and then-board member
Aryeh Neier (who helped found Human Rights Watch), tried to persuade South
African officials to ease the country's practice of imprisoning journalists and
taking other highly repressive steps such as "banning" them from public life.

Minister of Law and Order Louis La Grange was unabashed
about procedures that clearly lacked due process and indignant that they were
being challenged. Yet later in the meeting, La Grange's tone softened: He told our
delegation that he had once met Cronkite. "Should I give Walter your regards?"
asked Neier. "No, he wouldn't remember me," said La Grange. "But I certainly remember him."

For Neier, the interaction was a lesson in the power of the U.S. media and
one of its leading figures. A government official who was so powerful in South Africa
that he proudly took credit for approving journalist detentions was in awe of
Walter Cronkite.

Cronkite's involvement continued through the years. He
continued to write letters, host fundraisers, and attend our annual International
Press Freedom Awards. In 1995, Cronkite helped persuade Turkish Prime Minister
Tansu Ciller to drop charges against Reuters correspondent Aliza Marcus, who
faced prison for reporting on counterinsurgency strikes against Kurdish rebels.

In a 2006 interview for our magazine, Dangerous
Assignments, Cronkite recalled CPJ's efforts on behalf of Turkish
journalists: "The committee's long-running efforts to persuade several
consecutive governments in Turkey
to adopt basic democratic principles of free speech and free speech and free
press resulted in wide recognition of our devotion to these freedoms. It's an
enduring effort and I'm proud to say that (former chairwoman and current board
member) Kati Marton and I were early representatives of the committee,
dispatched to try to relieve the Turkish leadership's incredibly repressive treatment
of the press."

Michael Massing recalls Cronkite's contributions as
invaluable:

In its nearly 30 years, the
Committee to Protect Journalists has undergone many changes, growing from a
tiny group of volunteers in New York to a global network working on behalf of
beleaguered journalists around the world, but throughout its existence one
thing has remained constant: Walter Cronkite's position as its honorary
chairman.

Walter's association with the
organization proved invaluable. Indeed, without it, the Committee might not
have survived. His name has remained prominently linked with the Committee's--a
seal of integrity and trustworthiness. On the occasion of the Committee's 25th
anniversary, Walter appeared at a private dinner held in his honor and attended
by executives from national news organizations whose backing CPJ was seeking.
He spoke with great feeling about the Committee's work over its first
quarter-century and about the gratitude he felt for being associated with it.
The real gratitude, of course, is the Committee's, for the unwavering support
he showed for its work over all these years. CPJ remains committed to
continuing that work in the spirit of the ideals he so faithfully embodied.

As
CPJ Chairman Paul Steiger said in remembering Cronkite's enduring contribution to
press freedom, "From putting
his own life on the line to cover the battlefields of World War II to
challenging the 'thugs' who physically harassed his reporters on the floor of
the 1968 Democratic National Convention, Walter Cronkite knew firsthand the
challenges journalists face bringing news to the public, and he never forgot
them. Whenever press freedom needed a champion, he was there. We will miss
him."

Joel Simon is the executive director of the Committee to Protect Journalists. He has written widely on media issues, contributing to Slate, Columbia Journalism Review, The New York Review of Books, World Policy Journal, Asahi Shimbun, and The Times of India. He has led numerous international missions to advance press freedom. His book, The New Censorship: Inside the Global Battle for Media Freedom, will be released November 11, 2014. Follow him on Twitter @Joelcpj. His public GPG encryption key can be found here.

Comments

It says a lot about Walter Cronkite's influence that his death was mentioned on many foreign TV channels whose viewers never had the chance to see him. Tonight Belgian public service TV paid tribute to his journalistic legacy as if he were one of their own anchors and I had calls from friends and from younger people asking for more information on "Uncle Walter". They had just discovered that the world had lost a great and inspiring journalist.
During my first years as a journalist Walter Cronkite was a constant reference. I never really watched him but I read about him in books and essays commending his decency and high professional standards.
More personnally he reminded me of an episode in history that shaped my country and my family's fate. While researching for a book on the U.S.history "from Bastogne to Baghdad" I discovered that as a journalist for UPI he had been with Patton's army during its counteroffensive to free the town of Bastogne during the Battle of the Bulge in winter 1944. Living in the Ardennes, my parents were on the frontlines of Hitler's last gamble and for years on until they passed away they read everything about this dramatic moment. They had read Martha Gellhorn and John Toland's reportages on the Ardennes battlefieds but they had missed Cronkite's wire stories.
Today I listened with respect to Walter Cronkite's 2004 testimony on NPR recalling the largest pitched battle in US military history and the victory that changed the course of the war and more modestly the life of my parents. His testimony is a great contribution of the hard encounters between journalism and war. It is above all a lesson of modesty and humanity.
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=4246503

From Papua New Guinea - we pay tribute to the late Walter Cronkite.
Walter was an idol and role model to me personally and to young journalists although we never met, we read and followed his writings and advises.

To the family - our sincere heartfelt wishes and our prayers are with you all at this time of sorrow.

I read a book years ago about Walter Cronkite called "The Last Train out of Berlin", he wrote it. I got it at one of the Elkhart Indiana library's for 25 cents or so at their book sale rack, passed the book on to a friend's son to read after holding on to it for years and never saw it again. It was such a great book and truly Walter Cronkite at his best at what he did. I sure wish I had that book now. I remember the book well and his working into the dead of night trying to finish an article or newspaper for the states and just about to miss (for real) the last train out of Berlin during Hitler's era. I can almost as when I read it see him pinging on the old typewriters back then.